Deaf-blindness

Deaf-blindness, disability in which an individual has both a hearing impairment and a visual impairment. Deaf-blind individuals form a highly heterogeneous group, in which hearing and visual impairments are expressed to varying degrees.

Hearing and visual impairment

An individual is diagnosed with a hearing impairment if he or she has a hearing loss greater than 30 decibels in at least one ear. There are different types of hearing loss. A conductive hearing loss consists of damage to or obstruction of the outer or middle ear. A sensorineural hearing loss is caused by damage to the inner ear or the auditory nerve. A mixed hearing loss is diagnosed when an individual has both a conductive and a sensorineural hearing loss. Cortical deafness is caused by damage to the auditory cortex of the brain. A hearing loss of any kind can range from mild to profound. A conductive hearing loss can often be aided with hearing aids or surgery. These means of treatment are ineffective, however, for combined conductive and cortical hearing loss, due to nerve damage associated with the latter, which causes distortions of sound.

According to the World Health Organization, a visual impairment may be defined as visual acuity of 20/70 to 20/400 after correction. Worse than 20/400 constitutesblindness (in some places, the cutoff for legal blindness is 20/200). A visual impairment can be caused by damage to the eye itself, damage to the visual nerve, or damage to the visual cortex in the brain.

Causes of deaf-blindness

The causes of deaf-blindness vary greatly among the population of deaf-blind individuals. A genetic syndrome known as Usher syndrome is the most frequent genetic cause of deaf-blindness. However, other genetic syndromes, such as CHARGE syndrome and Goldenhar syndrome, can also cause the condition. Other causes include illnesses or diseases of the pregnant mother or her child (e.g., rubella, meningitis, cytomegalovirus, and tumours) or accidents (e.g., head injury). A combination of any of the causes mentioned above is also possible. For example, an individual may be born deaf because of a genetic syndrome and may later lose vision as a result of an accident or illness. Deaf-blindness is also associated with premature birth.

The type of hearing and vision loss can vary, depending on the underlying cause of deaf-blindness. For example, individuals who experience vision and hearing loss secondary to Goldenhar syndrome are most likely to have a conductive hearing loss and damage to the eyes due to anomalies in the structure of the skull. By contrast, individuals who had meningitis tend to have a sensorineural hearing loss and a vision loss due to damage to the visual nerve.

Communication and community membership

Deaf-blindness must also be viewed from a cultural perspective. Similar to their medical backgrounds, deaf-blind individuals’ cultural identities vary greatly. Depending on the age at which an individual became deaf and blind, he or she may be inclined to associate with and may feel closest to other similarly affected deaf-blind individuals. This similarity is often based on the preferred method of communication used within the different groups. Individuals in the blind community and the mainstream community are likely to use spoken language as their main means of communication, whereas individuals in the deaf community are likely to communicate by using a signed language. The deaf-blind community is the community with the most diverse communication methods. Some may use a signed language, whereas others may use a spoken language. Others may use writing, braille, or Tadoma (i.e., tactile speechreading), whereas still others may use a combination of all these.

Research on the deaf community has yielded a wealth of knowledge about deaf culture as a minority culture. Deaf individuals tend to view themselves as members of a linguistic minority within society and often do not view themselves as disabled. Members of the deaf community tend to have a number of characteristics in common: they share a physical attribute (i.e., their deafness) and tend to identify as members of the deaf community; many deaf individuals are proud of their language (e.g., American Sign Language), which is commonly used in poetry and art; and deaf individuals also display a number of culturally characteristic behaviours, the most pronounced of which are possibly behaviours that attract attention, such as stomping feet, waving arms, tapping on the shoulder, or flashing lights.

Individuals who were born blind or became blind early and later became deaf are more likely to use spoken language as their main means of communication. Because of their hearing loss, they might later add some signs, finger spelling, Tadoma, or other forms of manual communication (e.g., printing on the palm) to aid in communication. These individuals tend to identify with and therefore associate primarily with the blind community, with the mainstream community, or with the disabled community, and they may also associate with the deaf-blind community.

Individuals who were born deaf or become deaf early and later become blind are likely to use a signed language as their main communication method and therefore associate with other members of the deaf community. Because of their ties to the deaf community, they are likely to be involved with deaf culture and may later also become involved in the deaf-blind community. Some deaf individuals who became blind, however, may feel ostracized by the deaf community, and thus they may withdraw and associate primarily with the deaf-blind community.

The individuals who were born deaf-blind are likely to associate with any of several communities, including the deaf community, the blind community, the deaf-blind community, the disabled community, and mainstream society. Which groups individuals are drawn to depends largely on the severity of their hearing and vision losses, on the community in which they grew up, on the type of schools they attended, and on which language they prefer to use. For example, individuals who consider their deafness to be the most important aspect of their identity and who use a signed language are likely to associate with the deaf community, whereas individuals who have significant amounts of residual hearing and vision and primarily rely on spoken language will associate mostly with mainstream society.

The individuals who spent most of their lives as sighted and hearing persons and then suddenly became deaf-blind may feel disoriented regarding culture and community membership. They likely spent much of their lives in mainstream society and used spoken language to communicate. As deaf-blind individuals, however, they may need to learn alternate methods of communication, and, depending on which options they choose and prefer, they may join any of the communities. This group is especially likely to be drawn to either the deaf-blind community or the disability community, because in both of these communities a diversity of communication options seems to be accepted, allowing these individuals full participation and access.

Deaf-blindness in children

When considering deaf-blindness from a developmental perspective, it is also possible to consider deaf-blindness from both the medical and the cultural or social perspectives. Researchers following the medical perspective, the most common point of view within the field of developmental science, tend to focus on the deficits of deaf-blind children and on the delays they experience in comparison with their typically developing peers. Within the developmental science framework, the cultural model allows researchers to study the plasticity of development in general and to learn about the development of identity and cultural affiliation of minority groups.

From a developmental medical point of view, the most important aspects of deaf-blindness are the age of onset and the severity of the hearing and visual impairments. According to the developmental model, the two sensory impairments multiply the effects of one another and intensify the impact each one has on an individual. Having two impairments likely inhibits the compensation of one impairment through the use of the other (e.g., compensating for deafness by lipreading). Consequently, the earlier the auditory and the visual impairments occur and the more severe the level of each impairment, the greater the consequences on development.

Deaf-blindness is likely to affect cognitive, language, social, and emotional development. Individuals who were born both deaf and blind commonly experience significant delays because they are not able to observe and thus learn about the world as readily as sighted or hearing infants do. According to Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget, whose research focused on cognitive development, individuals need to gain experience within their environment to acquire the skills and the knowledge necessary to successfully complete the tasks for each of four developmental stages. The sensorimotor period, the stage between birth and two years in which infants learn about the basic properties of objects, progresses through a series of substages and culminates in the infant’s ability to mentally represent objects. Infants acquire object permanence, the knowledge that objects continue to exist even when they are hidden. This is considered a difficult task for blind and deaf-blind infants because they only learn about the world within their reach. There are limited or no visual or auditory clues to provide them with information. Interesting objects within the environment encourage infants to investigate their surroundings. For blind and deaf-blind infants, this is not the case. Therefore, they spend much of their time in resting positions, often resorting to self-stimulating behaviours. Similar observations can be made throughout deaf-blind children’s development. With increasing age, the delays become greater, and it becomes difficult for them to catch up to their peers. It is therefore beneficial for the development of deaf-blind infants that they are diagnosed early and that age-appropriate stimulation is started young.

Deaf-blind children’s language development is also at risk for significant delays. First, deaf-blind children, similar to blind children in general, are likely to be delayed in their mental representation abilities and subsequently in their language development. Second, deaf-blind children with a significant hearing impairment tend to be delayed in their language development because they typically do not have access to language. They cannot hear spoken language, and they cannot see and thus imitate gestures or signs. Some deaf-blind infants, similar to deaf infants, may develop their own rudimentary gestures for certain objects or events. However, due to the lack of mental representation skills, infants born deaf-blind are less likely than deaf infants to be able to string together individual gestures to form complete thoughts or to express desires. On the other hand, those young children who either became deaf-blind after already acquiring mental representation abilities and those who have significant residual vision or hearing may learn mental representational skills more easily than their peers who were born completely deaf-blind.

Environmental factors play an essential role in determining later outcomes in children. This is the case particularly for deaf-blind children. If deaf-blind children are provided with an accessible language and an accessible environment in which they are stimulated and encouraged to investigate their surroundings, they learn at a rate similar to that of their hearing and sighted peers.